Discovering Infinity
Volume 4:

Light Piercing the Heart of Darkness
a research book by Rolf A. F. Witzsche

Page 75
Chapter 2: (column 2) Love versus Oligarchism Destroying Humanity.


In this fundamentally oligarchic organization, the principle of the rule of a few over many has been elevated in leaps and bounds, negating the fundamental proposition on which the highest platform of civilization had been founded, that all men are created equally and in the image of God.  The sacrifices that were demanded of the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki will be honored when people the world over will stand up in times of election and ask their candidate about their willingness to withdraw their nation from the U.N. and judge the fitness of the candidates accordingly.  Moreover, the sacrifice of these people's life should not be allowed to have been in vain, but should serve as a catalyst to eradicate the principle of oligarchism as a whole, right across the globe, together with its world-wide structures and organizations that have served in the destruction of Nagasaki and Hiroshima for the creation of the U.N. dictatorship.  The sacrificing of the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki should be remembered by setting up in their honor, out of the ashes of the U.N., an international development clearing house through which technology transfers and other forms of support can flow for the economic development of humanity.

The only meaningful response to the oligarchy's destruction of love in human consciousness is to develop a full scale appreciation of the true nature of man and man's potential for infinite growth.  We need to develop that love that drives the development of tomorrow's technologies, the unlocking of newer and greater resources for living that have never been touched on before.  It should never be said again that 15% of the world's people use consume 85% of the world's produced resources.  It should be said instead that all nations on the planet have developed the means to access and utilize resources as the most advanced nations on the globe had once achieved.  Mankind is not limited by any real lack of available resources, but is limited by its unwillingness to develop the available resources for its use.  Already, modern technology of nuclear power, through the fast breeder reactor, has given mankind access to affordable energy resources that are sufficient to supply the current world need for energy many times over for billions of years to come, until the earth becomes consumed when the sun enters its next stage and becomes a red giant.

The development potential of the human intellect is well illustrated in James Cooper's novel, The Crater.  Its story begins with a shipwreck like the famous novel, Robinson Caruso.  But Cooper's setting is not a lush tropical jungle where the earth provides everything of value according to the old feudalist ideology.  Cooper's setting is a barren volcanic island, and all that is brought to it some seed, rescued from the ship, and a few domesticated animals.  Even the soil in which the seeds were to be planted had to be created out of volcanic ash and bird droppings.  And so, through the use of intelligence, the barren land becomes turned into a garden rich with life.  In the end, unlike Robinson Crusoe, who never goes back to his island, Cooper's adventurers return, and they return with a whole lot of people in order to further develop the island under a form of republican government in which all are acknowledged as equal in value.

As the most minimal beginning of mankind's rededication to life, instead of to starvation, it needs to take immediate measures to restart the production of the life-giving and life-protecting pesticide DDT, and the life-supporting CFC refrigerants, which have been banned, and restart the world's nuclear energy development that decades of darkness have put on hold.  The nuclear energy development needs to be pursued not as a means to curb CO2 emissions which are of no importance as the global warming theory is a hoax.  This energy development is required in order to open the horizon of mankind to unlimited resources and the associated boundless potential for creating infrastructures for living and for the production of food.

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